Classic Eventing Nation

Weekend Winners: Chatt Hills, Galway, Jumping Branch, Morven, TerraNova

Happy April, Eventing Nation! We’re all certainly excited to be in the thick of spring season, and are happy to be reporting on another busy weekend out eventing! We saw many successful rides at Chatt Hills, Galway, Jumping Branch, Morven, and TerraNova.

Congrats to all, with a special shout out to our Unofficial Low Score Award winner Amanda Beale Clement and KC’s Mosaic with a stellar 14.4 in the Open Beginner Novice B at Jumping Branch!

Chattahoochee Hills H.T. (Fairburn, GA) [Website] [Results]

Earlier this year, Chattahoochee Hills announced their offering of $35,000 for their spring events, including a $25,000 A/I division, designed to assist riders in their preparation for Kentucky, and other big spring runs. Recognizing the importance of choice, Chattahoochee Hills is working to provide both the physical and financial support to riders to build a season that best supports their horses.

Alexandra Baugh and MHS Fernhill Finale. Photo by Liz Crawley.

Advanced/Intermediate: Alexandra Baugh and MHS Fernhill Finale (45.6)
Open Intermediate: Ryan Wood and Check Point (51.2)
Open Preliminary: Marissa Griffin and Conguistador (27.9)
Open Modified: Alexa Thompson and Parlez Clear (33.8)
Open Training: Darrah Alexander and Layla LFS (27.2)
Training Rider: Avery Grantham and Watch Maker C (30.0)
Junior Novice Rider: Vivian Pierce and Fernhill Saulsford Nazar (26.1)
Open Novice: Ella Kay Lane and Dark Shadow’s (34.2)
Senior Novice Rider: Cece McElwee and Famous Pen Pal (30.0)
Beginner Novice Rider: Olivia Martinez and Super Cooper (35.3)
Open Beginner Novice: Alison Zeitlin and Royal Report (21.8)

Valerie Pride and Favian. Photo by Liz Crawley.

Ryan Wood and Cooley Flight. Photo by Liz Crawley.

Galway Downs International H.T (Temecula, CA) [Website] [Results]

CCI-4*S: Tamra Smith and Mai Baum (31.4)
CCI-3*S: Taren Hoffos and Regalla (43.4)
CCI-2*S: Jordan Linstedt and Lovely Lola (26.9)
Advanced: James Alliston and Karma (45.1)
Intermediate: Molly Duda and Disco Traveler (40.8)
Open Preliminary: Tommy Greengard and Kremer VD Falieberg (27.1)
Preliminary Rider: Maeson Messmer and Gambling On Jack (36.1)
Modified Rider: Jessica Berntson and HS Wis Sport (37.9)
Open Modified A: Frankie Thieriot Stutes and Cooley Sky Watch (30.1)
Open Modified B: Rebecca Braitling and Conlino PS (24.8)
Junior Training Rider: Avery Fletcher and Whats That Sportsfield (36.7)
Open Training: Auburn Excell Brady and Galliard’s Lancer (25.0)
Senior Training Rider: Kayley Batt and Kingsfield Jasperretto (32.2)
Training Amateur: Jessica Jones and Jameson (30.0)
Training Horse: Amber Birtcil and Maverick (27.5)
Junior Novice Rider: Paige Beauchamp Crandon and Fyfin Ramiro (28.1)
Novice Amateur: Jacqueline Gilmartin and Citizen Jane (28.3)
Novice Horse: Marc Grandia and Fierzel Duverie (23.6)
Open Novice: Whitney Tucker Billeter and Beautiful Mine (27.8)
Senior Novice Rider: Sadie Geernaert and Quixotic KC (30.6)
Beginner Novice Horse: Patience O’Neal and Limitless P (21.2)
Beginner Novice Rider A: Kate Flaherty and Eli’s Coming (30.0)
Beginner Novice Rider B: Erin Rousey and Winsome Willow (34.0)
Open Beginner Novice: Erin Kellerhouse and FE CUPCAKE (22.1)

Jumping Branch Farm H.T (Aiken, SC) [Website] [Results]

Open Preliminary: Shannon Riley and Ingress (32.4)
Preliminary Rider: Darci Phelps and Sandro Street (40.0)
Junior Training: Mary Bauersfeld and Calle (31.7)
Open Training A: Emily Watson and Upland Seven Z (28.9)
Open Training B: Kaelen Speck and Checkwithme (33.6)
Training Rider A: Shelley Onderdonk and River Dance LC (32.6)
Training Rider B: Lisa Edinger and Quinto Quest (31.5)
Novice Rider: Cynthia Holbrook and Sweet Pea (26.1)
Junior Novice: Abigail Walker and Galway Bay Cooley (33.3)
Open Novice A: Emily Smith and Vallis Alpes (26.1)
Open Novice B: Gabrielle Hutchison and GHE Time Traveler (26.4)
Beginner Novice Rider A: Catherine Kelly and Gas House (34.1)
Beginner Novice Rider B: Susanna Ringler and Royal Colors (27.4)
Junior Beginner Novice: Addison Amato and Hermione Granger (37.1)
Open Beginner Novice A: Alison Eastman-Lawler and Lexington II (25.6)
Open Beginner Novice B: Amanda Beale Clement and KC’s Mosaic (14.4)

Morven Park Spring H.T. (Leesburg, VA) [Website] [Results]

Open Intermediate: Boyd Martin and Fedarman B (40.4)
Open Preliminary A: Ema Klugman and RF Redfern (25.3)
Open Preliminary B: Mckenna Martinez and Commitment (30.3)
Junior Training: Bailey Kent and Scooby Dooby Doo (27.4)
Open Training: Keara Schmidt and Iniesta M (31.2)
Training Horse: Stevie LeCain and Fletcher Christian (31.7)
Training Rider A: Rachel Bitsko and Well Al Be (31.4)
Training Rider B: Jessica Goldberg and America Runs on Duncan (36.1)
Junior Novice Rider: Ella Genkinger and Soup of the Day (33.3)
Novice Horse: Martha Wunder and I’ll Have Another (29.7)
Novice Rider A: Katherine Holzrichter and Idlehour Center Stage (31.3)
Novice Rider B: Melissa Fox and Tito Tonight (27.5)
Open Novice: Kurt Martin and Baraboo MVH Z (29.6)
Beginner Novice Rider: Lynn Kundravi and Rocket Man (31.8)
Junior Beginner Novice Rider: Kelley Sell and Mojave Moon (35.9)
Open Beginner Novice: Katherine Lorenzen and Make it a Double (33.8)

The Event at TerraNova (Myakka City, FL) [Website] [Results]

CCI-4*S: Elisabeth Halliday-Sharp and Cooley Be Cool (30.6)
CCI-3*S: Lea Adams-Blackmore and Frostbite (34.3)
CCI-2*S: Elisabeth Halliday-Sharp and Maybach (15.5)
CCI-1*S: Elisa Wallace and Tullymurry Fifi (28.6)
Open Intermediate: Ashton Hays and A Boy Named Rozy (43.4)
Open Preliminary: Bethany Hutchins-Kristen and Geluk HVF (29.4)
Preliminary Rider: Sherry Pound and Carnaby (31.4)
Open Training: Dan Kreitl and Horales (26.2)
Training Rider: Abigail Mazzatta and DCE Pandora’s Dream (26.7)
Novice Rider: Aline Briot and Divine Legacy (26.4)
Open Novice: Sinead Maynard and Lightning V/Z (21.1)
Beginner Novice Rider: Abigail Bennett and Stormin Hot (28.5)
Open Beginner Novice: Vanessa Stevenson and Fidelio (24.1)
Intro: Evan Heller and O’Cally (31.0)

Monday News & Notes from FutureTrack

We’ve spent a lot of time over the last few days talking about Thoresby’s weather — but we haven’t really mentioned Thoresby’s loony-bin of horses who haven’t had a run yet this season and were positively loopy as a result. I can’t tell you how many times I’ve watched this video of India Wishart attempting to mount up in the stables. Truly quality content.

National Holiday: It’s National Blue Ribbon Week, which sounds quite nice and horsey, but has actually been set up to raise awareness of the various forms that child abuse can take and the long-lasting effects it can have. Let’s all take this as our cue to keep an eye on our smaller barn denizens and help to safeguard them in any way we can.

US Weekend Results:

Chattahoochee Hills H.T. (Fairburn, GA) [Website] [Results]

Galway Downs International H.T (Temecula, CA) [Website] [Results]

Jumping Branch Farm H.T (Aiken, SC) [Website] [Results]

Morven Park Spring H.T. (Leesburg, VA) [Website] [Results]

The Event at TerraNova (Myakka City, FL) [Website] [Results]

UK Weekend Results:

The Eventing Spring Carnival at Thoresby Park (Newark, Notts): [Website] [Results] [EN’s Coverage]

Arena Eventing Championships: [Results]

Your Monday Reading List:

Equestrian sport is heralded for its gender equality – but that’s actually a pretty recent thing. COTH has been looking back at how women first made their way into the sport, the battles many have faced to be allowed to participate, and the state of the union now. [The curious history of female equestrians]

A 15-year-old, £600 OTTB has made its Grand Prix dressage debut in the UK. ‘Rosie’ isn’t just a testament to the versatility of the Thoroughbred — she’s a testament to out-of-the-box thinking, too, with some unique training tactics on the table that have helped her learn the trickier movements of these top-level tests. [Thoroughbreds rock, tbh]

Struggling with hindend engagement? Sounds like you need some simple exercises to add into your schooling arsenal. These ones, from our sister site Horse Nation, will help you get that eureka moment where you feel your horse step under himself and elevate his forehand. It’s a nice feeling, that. [Engage the booty]

The FutureTrack Follow:

 

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A post shared by E Q U I S P O R T I F (@equisportif)

Got an interest in showjumping, too? Liv of EquiSportif is one of those cool people I only see around once or twice a year, because she basically does all the things I do — just in that discipline, rather than this one. Her photos are gorgeous and I’m constantly screenshotting them for inspo — and whether you’re a ‘tog or just a horse lover, I reckon you will, too.

Morning Viewing:

Turn those subtitles on and head to Germany to train with Juliane Barth and Nico Aldinger!

Emily King and Piggy March Victorious in Overhauled Thoresby Finale

The weekend’s champions: Emily King and Valmy Biats. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

In many ways, it feels like I’ve split this week between two — or more — completely different events. On Thursday evening, I arrived at the Eventing Spring Carnival at Thoresby Park on a warm, sunny afternoon to see a very small early group of four-star horses and riders complete their tests. We sat on the ground! We were warm! I think I might have actually taken my coat off at one point! The next day, though, the rain poured down all day, while scores of horses rattled through their tests in worsening ground and the mood around the place plummeted. Then, Saturday dawned, grey and dreary but mercifully dry, but at that point — after all that mud and a CCI2*-S showjumping session that had left everyone’s sanity in tatters due to the conditions — an enormous number of withdrawals had already been logged, and many of the riders I chatted with were considering whether the ground on Sunday would even be functional for a much-needed run ahead of this spring’s five-stars. And then we had today: gloriously, unexpectedly sunny (and truly, it’s not often that the forecast is wrong in a positive way), blessed with a ground-drying breeze and a by-now unfamiliar wholly unfamiliar feeling of overwhelming positivity about the place.

And you know what? They really did pull it off. Stuart Buntine and his team at BEDE Events have moved mountains — or, at least, arenas — to try to find the best going in the park, which saw CCI4*-S showjumping hoiked up to an unused patch of ground near the lorry park and the former main arena space, with all its trade stands and food trucks, turned into a bustling country fair and activity zone instead to keep the tradesmen and the punters happy. Fence 10ABC, a table-open corner-table combination in front of the house, bid adieu to its final element, a decision Stuart had kept in his back pocket in case the ground wasn’t quite up to par. Take-offs and landings were reinforced with stone; times for classes were shifted around a bit, and the show went on. For those who had opted to stay and cash in their run, it turned into a very good day at the office indeed: we saw just 34 runners in the Grantham Cup feature CCI4*-S, and 31 of those went on to complete, while in section P, 25 of the remaining 29 starters, most of whom were on inexperienced horses, completed.

Alex Bragg and Quindiva. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

While it’s disappointing for the organising team that so many of their original field of 148 didn’t start, it’s also understandable: Thoresby is a new venue, and is in just its second year of hosting the fixture that was previously run by the same team at Belton. The joy of longstanding events is that riders get to know them; they know how the ground will react if we’re in a dry patch, and they know how it’ll react in a wet month, and they know which segments and fields will get deep or choppy or difficult, purely because they’ve run so many times, in so many years and so many different conditions, that they’ve gained an intimate familiarity with the place. In the case of an event like Thoresby, though, we’re all still just on a second date asking it what its favourite colour is and if it has any mental exes lurking in the woodwork that we need to hastily block on Instagram. This isn’t yet a long-term relationship; it’s still a getting-to-know-you venture, and so riders and owners alike had to make a tough decision with limited knowledge of what was to come.

For organiser Stuart, this has been slightly frustrating — but, he hopes, this week’s event will have helped to foster confidence in competitors for the years to come, because they now know that the ground can actually take a serious beating and then still deliver on the most crucial day.

“When we lost Belton, we were looking for somewhere that had ground as good as that,” he explains, “and in my heart of hearts, I knew this ground would work. But I’ve only had two years’ experience here, too, so it’s a bit of a wing and a prayer. Five days ago, I was really confident because the forecast looked good — and then it went down again. But my commitment was, at the beginning of the week, to give the big boys that run for Badminton, and that was what I set out to do. And so we had to sacrifice those early classes. Probably against my better judgement, we accepted all the four star horses [in the entries], because we originally had 110 [and would waitlist the rest]. And we’ve pushed that up to 160 this week, which nearly doubled the workload on the arenas and all that type of stuff.”

Wills Oakden and Arklow Puissance. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

That decision, though, came as part of his desire to ensure any horse with a big event on the horizon would get the experience, and the crack at a qualifying result, that it needed — even if it meant resorting to plans B, C, D and beyond to make it happen.

“It was an interesting one, because I had two choices: move the showjumping, or cancel the event,” he says. “There were times when you were looking down the barrel and thinking, ‘are we right continue on?’ Thursday night, I was pretty worried. Friday night, I was even more worried. But we got there. I knew there was other ground we could use for showjumping, and okay, that we had to make a sacrifice with the dressage, but these guys do lots of dressage — what I didn’t think they’d got enough of  [this year] is cross country rounds. I suppose what’s disappointed me the most was I kicked out 200 riders [in the cancelled national classes] to give the big boys a chance, and then a lot of them went home — and I don’t think today, anybody can say a word against the ground.”

This result, he hopes, will encourage riders to wait a little longer in future before withdrawing — but, he says, there also needs to be further engagement between riders and organisers through the event so that everyone can stay on the same page.

“We did do a riders’ briefing every night, and it’s disappointing when they don’t turn up and they don’t engage,” he says. “The big guys like Piggy, Pippa, Harry [Meade], people like that have been engaging all week, so we could talk through and be open with them saying, ‘look, I think this is right’. It helps, but it’s disappointing when so many people don’t even engage. And it’s hard for us as organisers, because we’re trying to do the right thing. If they don’t engage, it makes it it makes it difficult, because it shouldn’t be them versus us. Our absolute passion and aim is deliver a really great event.”

It’s always better to end the week on a more positive note than it started on, though, and Stuart’s happy in the knowledge that that box has been ticked — and the spectators turned up in their droves today, too.

“I remember listening to [Chair of the Organising Committee] Seb Coe before London 2012, and he said, ‘if you provide the best facilities in the best situation, you get the best competition. If you get the best competition, you’ll get the best crowds.’ And that’s the frustrating thing from my end, that I had people turning up today because we had good competition and we did get good results. So that’s the sad part. But hopefully, they’ll learn from us and trust us.”

Emily King and Valmy Biats accept the Polly Phillips Trophy from Vere Phillips. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

The rider who’ll perhaps be happiest she trusted in the system is Emily King, who came into cross-country still in second place having delivered an easy clear round in the showjumping aboard Valmy Biats. When overnight leaders Yasmin Ingham and Banzai du Loir opted for a steady clear and picked up 18.8 time penalties, the door was opened — and when the pair crossed the line having picked up a relatively scant 14.4 time penalties, they stepped into top spot, winning the coveted Grantham Cup ahead of their second Badminton bid next month.

“I can’t really believe it — it’s like it didn’t really happen,” says a beaming Emily, who also won the Polly Phillips prize for the best-placed British rider who hasn’t yet ridden on a Senior team. “He was just fantastic all week; this is his first run of the season, and so if he’d been a bit feisty in his test, I’d have fully forgiven him. But he was a really good boy, and then this morning in showjumping he was superb — I couldn’t have asked for anything more from him.”

Emily King and Valmy Biats. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

On cross-country, she explains, she wanted to balance giving him a suitable prep for Badminton — which requires putting some pressure on these more experienced horses — with keeping him confident and running at a sensible pace, which was a communal ethos across the class.

“I wanted to let him travel on the good ground and look after him; there were patches that were deep, but we knew that from walking the course, and so I made a conscious effort to just go steady through them. I wanted to go a bit speedy but my number one priority was that he was perfect on the fences for when he goes to Badminton, so I was like, what will be will be with the time.”

Designing a course for this part of the year is a tricky ask, because when a wet month hits and horses miss early national runs, it’s often the case that they come to the first international on no runs at all — and that was certainly true for many of this field. That means that the course needs to be forgiving enough to allow for some rust being knocked off, but because of Thoresby’s proximity to Kentucky and Badminton, it also has to be serious enough to actually prepare horses for what’s to come. Last year, it was felt that the course leaned more towards the former qualities than the latter, and this year, Emily reckons they’ve found a happy middle ground.

“I think it was a really nice balance for ones like him that haven’t run yet this year — you know, not too crazy and big and technical, but also enough to get your eye in and get their eye in. There were some real accuracy questions, and then there was a very open distance in one line — so you had to actually do stuff in the combinations. There was a nice level of testing, but also confidence-boosting. For Val, he finished how I wanted him to at the end of the course; he was in a really good frame of mind, and he felt like he had a nice calculated round — for him, it’s about building his capability for listening to me and not getting too brave and too onward-bound, and I think it did that as a good stepping stone for him.”

Emily King and Valmy Biats. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

One factor that may well have played a part in Val’s success in all three phases here is that he lives out in the field 24/7, come rain, shine, or snow — a choice that has helped the gelding, who’s majority-owned by Emily and breeder Philippe Brivois, alongside Jacquie and Jeremy Shere and the Event Horse Owners Syndicate, flourish.

“He’s actually the only one of mine who lives out full-time, although they all go out every day or every night,” Emily explains. “At Philippe’s stud, the horses all live out full-time, and they’re brought up like that. Val’s had a few riders, so I don’t know what they did with him, but with us, we found he can be quite a fussy eater, but when he’s living out, he just mooches around happily and eats really well. He’s so much happier — if he’s in a stable he weaves and box walks, but when he’s out, no matter the weather, and so happy. And because he’s used to that, and used to the ground changing, his legs are accustomed to it — and it helps that we gallop on grass at home, too.”

Ros Canter and Pencos Crown Jewel. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Ros Canter also logged a showjumping clear this morning with Bramham runner-up Pencos Crown Jewel, who then cruised home with 15.6 time penalties to take the bridesmaid spot here, too.

“I was really happy that the conditions kept drying, because I love it here — it’s good for my riding, and I think it suits me,” says Ros, who also logged a sixth-place finish with Lordships Graffalo and 13th with new ride Dassett Cooley Dun.

Ros Canter and Lordships Graffalol. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

“It’s really exciting [for Pencos Crown Jewel] because I’ve had her since she was three, and the owners are still supporting me, so it’s been a long old journey,” she says. “She’s such a trier, and probably the most talented horse in the world whose heart’s in exactly the right place. And for [World Championships mount] Lordships Graffalo, it was really important for him to run here today on this ground. He’s only rising eleven, and he’s gone pretty much his whole career running on good to firm ground. At Lincoln [in the mud], he stumbled a couple of times across country, and I thought it was probably because he wasn’t very educated on the ground, so I was quite keen to get around here. And he’s definitely come on from Lincoln and coped really well today. He’s just a lovely horse to ride cross country; I feel very lucky every time I point and shoot because he just does make me feel full of confidence.”

Yasmin Ingham and Banzai du Loir. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Though reigning World Champions and two-phase leaders Yasmin Ingham and Banzai du Loir had to sacrifice a win with their decision to run conservatively, they still finished in third place — and, as Yas explains, they achieved the only goal that truly mattered to them: logging a first and final run ahead of their trip to Kentucky in a couple of weeks.

“It was definitely not the most straightforward of weeks, just hoping to run,” she says. “Obviously the weather’s been a huge influence on a lot of people’s decisions, and it certainly made me think really hard about my decision today. But I thought the best thing was just for me to wait it out, see if it improves and how much it improves. And with the weather improving, I thought it was silly not to give it a chance — and it certainly felt really nice and soft, and they ran well on it. The plan was to come here and get our pre-Kentucky prep rolling, and I think we’ve done that nicely; to be honest, he just kind of picked his way around. Obviously, there’s parts that were a little bit deeper than others, but we just kind of stayed to the string and he jumped all the big combinations super, and was just nice and competent.”

Now, Yas is feeling good about her chances on her return to Kentucky, where she finished second in the horse’s five-star debut last spring: “I’m really excited, actually, and I do feel slightly better knowing what’s to come. Derek de Grazia is a very good course designer, so I’m going to expect a very big, bold course like last year, and he’s very clever with his questions, so I think we’ll just keep training — and now we’ve had a good run here, I think it’s silly not to be thinking positively into Kentucky.”

Kirsty Chabert took fourth place with Luhmühlen runner-up Classic VI after lodging one of the fastest rounds of the day, adding just 9.2 time penalties — though the win eluded them as the result of a rail in this morning’s showjumping. Georgia Bartlett, who will make her five-star debut at Badminton next month with Spano de Nazca, rounded out the top five with a clear showjumping round and 11.2 time penalties. The fastest round of the day in this class went the way of rising star Alice Casburn, who piloted her homebred five-star partner and Young Rider medallist Topspin to seventh with 7.6 time penalties, just a hair faster then eighth-placed Tom Crisp and his own homebred, Liberty and Glory, who will go back to Badminton brimming with confidence after finishing ninth at Burghley last year.

The top ten in the Grantham Cup feature CCI4*-S class.

Over in section P, which was reserved for lower-pointed horses, Piggy March made good on her two-phase lead to win with new-old ride Brookfield Cavalier Cruise, who added 11.2 time penalties to his first-phase score of 25.4 to seal the deal. This isn’t her first season with the gelding, though it’s her first international run with him — and only his second four-star. He took a top ten finish in his first, at Little Downham last year with Tom McEwen in the irons, but some of his earliest Intermediate runs were logged with Piggy aboard a few seasons ago.

Piggy March and Brookfield Cavalier Cruise. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

“He’s basically one that a lot of people have ridden, and he’s won for every rider,” says Piggy of the ten-year-old. “He’s a lovely natured horse, and he’s a really talented horse; a straightforward character who really enjoys his job. But he’s a very big horse, and so the time it’s taken him to get to this level really wouldn’t have done him any harm. He hasn’t been hammered as a young horse at all, and so he’s very exciting — he’s been off the radar, but I think he’s one that won’t run masses, and doesn’t need to run masses, because his temperament’s so good. I think he could go to some exciting places — I’m a very lucky girl and he’s a really cool horse.”

Piggy, who won the Grantham Cup here last year with Brookfield Inocent, was another rider who was delighted to see how the course had been developed after feeling that last year’s was slightly too soft to be a true five-star prep run: “It’s definitely a step up from last year,” she says. “It was a stronger course, and I think they’ve done very good job. I think there’s a lot of potential there, and they’re going the right way of making it a good course to prepare you for Badminton. My worry when I wrote about it last year was, is there enough places in the spring to actually prepare horses, with a good bit of timber or a decent sized ditch to put you on the right track for Badminton? But it did have more of that feel today.”

Piggy March and Brookfield Cavalier Cruise. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

She was also quick to emphasise the importance of everything we’ve collectively learned about the venue — and its capacity for handling inclement weather — this week.

“It’s a new place, and it’s the unknown,” she says. “I think there’ll be a lot of people that were quick to judge, who’d have been amazed at how quickly it dries, and how we learned what different parts of the grounds are like. The organisers have done an unbelievable job to keep it going and doing all they possibly could to keep the show on, which the sport needs. I think there’s so many positives here to take away, and I know a lot of people were feeling negative because they saw the lorry park on day one and everyone was so up against it [with the weather]. There was a lot of emotions flying everywhere. But I’m personally very glad I did stay out for today. I could have easily not been here from Friday, but I’ve learned a lot from the ground — so I hope it has a very positive feel for next year.”

Much of the rest of the leaderboard might well be the greatest Harry showdown we’ve ever seen: Harry Meade took second place and fifth place with Red Kite and Cavalier Crystal, respectively, while young Wesko Foundation member Harry Mutch took third and fourth with Shanbeg Cooley and HD The One.

Harry Meade and Red Kite. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

For Harry Meade, the ground was actually a highlight of his weekend.

“Most ground that we compete on is verging on being too firm,” he explains. “It’s not the fault of the events; they work really, really hard, but it’s a summer sport, and from a horsemanship point of view, it’s so easy for us just to run week in, week out on ground that’s too firm. But when you get the spring ground, horses go in it really well, and there’s nice light soil here, so it’s not heavy and holding.”

Part of his proclivity for softer going comes from his grounding in ‘old-school’ production, which includes hunting horses that need it.

Harry Meade and Cavalier Crystal. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

“Every horse has its own programme on my yard, and some spend the winter doing more showjumping and dressage, but I do have five horses who hunted through the winter — they had between four and eleven days each, depending on what they needed. And when I’ve been happy that that’s done the job it needed to, I’ve taken some of them to point-to-point courses — the day after a point-to-point, they’ve gone and run up alongside a few racehorses and they’ve done what they needed to.”

Though Red Kite didn’t hunt this season, he has done in the past — “he’s not naturally predisposed to cross-country,” explains Harry — which has been a critical turning point for him in terms of coping well with various ground conditions.

Harry Mutch and Shanbeg Cooley. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Harry Mutch is now reaping the rewards of the changes in his system and training implemented as part of his Wesko training, which saw him relocate for a period to trainer Pippa Funnell’s Surrey yard.

“We changed everything we do, and they’ve come out feeling on a whole different level,” he says. That helped him deliver the quickest four-star ride of the day: third-placed Shanbeg Cooley cruised round with just 3.6 time penalties, putting him lightyears ahead of his competitors in terms of speed — despite, or perhaps because of, a tricky lead-up to this week.

“His last big run was at Blenheim, and he fell, so I ran him really slow at Lincoln last month and he was horrible,” says Harry with a laugh. “He. just hates running slowly, so I went out today, and I was like, well, I need to wake up, first of all. It’s a good challenge for me to go really fast in order to find that comfortable rhythm that he just sits in. He just went around like an absolute speed demon, and made it really easy. Everything he came to, he was just like, ‘no problem!’ I think he actually took a stride out in one of the later combinations and everyone was like, ‘should you really have done that?’ but I just didn’t notice — it was just there to take.”

The top ten in the second CCI4*-S class.

And that, folks, is what we call an emotional rollercoaster. It’s been one heck of a week for everyone on the ground here at Thoresby (and, frankly, for the ground here at Thoresby), but I can pretty safely say that the mood shifted as dramatically as the weather today. The lorries being towed out of the event this afternoon will be full of much happier horses and riders than the ones that left previously. And now? We’re all one step closer to Badminton. Bring it on, and Go Eventing!

The Eventing Spring Carnival at Thoresby Park: [Website] [Times] [Live Scoring] [Live Stream] [EN’s Coverage]

No Foolin’ Around for Smith, Hoffos and Linstedt at Galway Downs

Tamie Smith and Mai Baum. Photo by Sherry Stewart.

Clayton Fredericks’ April Fools Day international cross-country track left no place for foolin’ around Saturday in the final phase of the Galway Downs International’s CCI divisions.

Tamie Smith retained her two spots atop the leaderboard — with the seasoned veteran Mai Baum edging Danito out of a lead he’d carried from dressage and after both show jumped double clear last night. While both horses made it look easy, it was not, Tamie asserted. “The course rode very difficult and technical and very reactive. There wasn’t any part where you could count on something riding like you’d planned it.”
The Bank and Double Houses at 13ABC, the Land Rover Mission Viejo Water Complex at 18 ABCD and the Brush Ditch-Pig Hut-Angle Brush at 21ABC were especially challenging.

Even with her “old, trusted partner,” Tamie admitted she was a bit nervous because Alexandra Ahearn’s 17-year-old German Sport Horse had not run since their World Equestrian Games Team Silver outing in September and the course “was riding way harder than I anticipated.”

Tamie considered the 6:19 optimal time “unmakeable” and, indeed, she and Mai Baum were the closest to it. Their 9.2 time penalties bumped up their 22.2 dressage score and they won on a 31.4, ahead of Danito’s 34.8, which included 14 time penalties.

“I went for it with both horses and I really tried to go faster with Danito,” Tamie reported. “He’s more of a long format horse. I can ride Mai Baum a little faster because he sets himself up for the jumps so well. Danito is not quite as careful and he’s a bit strong, so that’s part of it. But, both were awesome and I’m thrilled.”

Danito Takes the #2 Spot

Tamie Smith and Danito. Photo by Sherry Stewart.

Tamie’s roster of four horses in the 4* required schedule adjustments that interspersed Advanced rounds with her last two rides. Her third round, on the Elliot V Partnership’s 13-year-old Dutch Warmblood, ended badly coming out of the Land Rover Mission Viejo Water Complex. Elliot missed the 2nd angled roll-top, dumping Tamie in the dirt to her own and the crowd’s dismay. Horse and rider were unhurt, Tamie popped up and helped the fence judge replant the flag and headed back to ready Danito for his run.

Marc Grandia and Campari FFF. Photo by Sherry Stewart.

Saturday’s 4* cross-country was ideal prep for Mai Baum and Danito going into the Kentucky 5* later this month, Tamie said. Whereas for Elliot V, it showed that the Kentucky 4*-S may be the better option for this stage in his development.

Marc Grandia and Team Rebecca’s 13-year-old Holsteiner, Campari FFF, moved up into 3rd with 19.2 time penalties to end on a 53.5. Katy Robinson and her own Thoroughbred Outrageous Dance had the biggest jump up the standings — their 12.8 time penalties boosted them from 9th into 4th.

Regalla Regal in the 3*

Taren Hoffos and Regalla. Photo by Sherry Stewart.

Taren Hoffos’ steady progress with Regalla leaped forward when they crossed the finish line as the winners of their first CCI3*. They were victors in the 2* here two years ago, and Taren was thrilled with the performance of her mother Carolyn Hoffos’ 12-year-old Oldenburg.

The unusual circumstance of show jumping and cross-country on the same day worked out well for the pair. “She tends to get better the longer she goes, so I appreciated the format because it allowed me to leave the start box with a really rideable horse from the beginning.” Once out of the box, it was “insane how good she was,” especially in the courage and adjustability departments.

“She’s such a beast. She’s so brave,” Taren raved. “She’s really good at being bold at fences then coming back.” That adjustability was crucial in many places — the Ditch Wall at 7, the CWD Rails, Ditch and Brush at 10ABC, the Bank and House at 13AB, among them. “If I can give her a confident ride, she really trusts me. There were a lot of fences out there we’d never seen before and she was so good.”

Regalla’s show jumping and dressage were helped by a schooling show Galway Downs hosted the previous weekend, Taren said. Because of ring changes due to Thursday’s heavy rains, 3* jumping took place in the same ring they’d competed in last week, which helped. “She’s a really good jumper and she was a lot more forward than in our previous rounds at Intermediate.”

It’s All For The Horse

Megan McIver and Ellie. Photo by Sherry Stewart.

“With the switching of the arenas to get us the very best footing possible, the whole team is constantly thinking about what’s best for the horse,” she continued. “It’s all for the horse and they did a great job with communications, letting us all know what was going on.”

Just as in the 4*, nobody made the optimal time, in this case a 5:38, but Taren and Regalla’s 6:03 was quick enough to put them ahead of Tamie Smith and Kynan with the win on a 43.4. Also contesting his first 3*, Kynan answered every question and Tamie had the pedal down, but another division victory was not in the cards. “He’s so game and such a class horse,” she said of the Kynan Syndicate’s 8-year-old Dutch Warmblood.

Megan McIver and Elle made an impressive move from 13th position after dressage to third. The 11-year-old Holsteiner owned by Tally Chang was double clear in show jumping and had only 7.2 time faults on cross-country.

Linstedt & Lovely Lola Top 2*

Jordan Linstedt and Lovely Lola. Photo by Sherry Stewart.

Jordan Linstedt and Lovely Lola were wire-to-wire leaders, finishing on their dressage score of 26.9 to mark a milestone in a promising partnership. “She was phenomenal” said Jordan of the 9-year-old Hanoverian mare owned by the Lovas Partnership, LLC.

After clean show jumping, Lola was bold and confident all the way around cross-country. “I had to settle her in a few more places that maybe I’d like to, but she can have a little spook in her, so I was really happy that she jumped so boldly over all those ditches and into the water.”

It was a nice pick-up after the busy rider’s day started with a slip and horse and rider fall in the 3*. She and FE Friday were the first pair on course and it happened just after sailing through the imposing 13AB Bank and House. “He’s a big gangly guy, and there was visible dew on the grass. I probably should have been more cautious. It was very unfortunate. He’s a great cross-country horse and I think he could have finished in the top 3, but that’s the sport and it didn’t rattle me too much.”

Parker Equine Insurance Inaugural Award

19-year-old Gabriella Ringer finished as 2* reserve with the pride of “having a confident, sound, freshly-minted 2* horse” with her own Get Wild. She’s had the 11-year-old Dutch Warmblood gelding since he was 5 and she was 13 and it’s been a long, patient journey.

He started off “a bit buzzy in dressage” and ended “being brave and super over one of our biggest tracks. I could not be more proud of him.”

Gabriella was also proud to receive the inaugural Parker Equine Insurance Top Amateur Award in the 2* division, and to receive it from Parker Equine’s Donna Parker during the awards festivities.

Lauren Billys and her own Can Be Sweet, an 11-year-old German Warmblood, were third adding just .4 cross-country penalty for a 31.3.

Kellerhouse Kind Of “Fun”

At the end of the CCI phases of this event, Galway Downs organizer Robert Kellerhouse found himself in an unusual position — sitting still for a moment. “It was fun,” he concluded of an international odyssey that began with Thursday’s unforecast downpours which tested the mettle and adaptability of his staff, event officials and riders.

By “fun,” the 25-year organizing veteran means “it was rewarding to come up with a plan and have everyone trying to get to the same place, with no drama for the wrong reasons. It was a true team effort driven by focus and concentration, which is what you need to have a successful event under any circumstances.”

Robert was thrilled with the level of support shown. “Having the USEF’s technical director and eventing chef d’equipe, Robert Costello, here is huge for the riders. We don’t have big numbers, but we have a nice concentration of top horses, top professionals bringing newer horses and a top young rider like Sophie Click. They’re all benefitting from riding Clayton Fredericks’ courses. He’s a next generation guy and that’s great.

“To be doing this for 25 years and have the ability to take the next steps, to work with the next generation of people pushing to take everything to the next level… that’s my kind of fun.”

Speaking of the improvements made throughout the 242-acre property, Robert is particularly pleased with landscaping, footing and terrain upgrades on the cross-country course. They help bring that part of the venue on par with the high quality of arenas and amenities made possible in a partnership with hunter/jumper event organizers Ali and Francie Nilforushan.

“I think the tide is turning in that people across the country are talking about Galway Downs as the place to be. They’re starting to realize that our country has good things to offer on both coasts–in large part because we’ve stepped up our game on so many fronts.”

Robert assures that even bigger things are in store for the Galway Downs International in the fall. But first there’s the Spring Horse Trials May 12-14, featuring the renowned Preliminary Challenge. This showcase event is newly relocated from Northern California and sure to attract contenders from throughout the West.

National Horse Trials divisions conclude on Sunday.

Galway Downs International H.T (Temecula, CA) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Volunteer][Scoring]

Sunday Links from SmartPak

How could I pick just one of my favorite April Fool’s horse product posts? I’m sorry but “LeMoo” had me cackling in line at the Wendy’s. And the thought of a baby elephant in a teeny little Kensington blanket… it’s just too much guys, you can’t do this to me. However, due to my mare possessing a personality and a half, I think we should petition Flair to give us a real line of emoji Flair Strips, because let’s face it — they’d be everywhere.

U.S. Weekend Action:

Chattahoochee Hills H.T. (Fairburn, GA) [Website] [Entries] [Volunteer] [Scoring]

Galway Downs International H.T (Temecula, CA) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Volunteer][Scoring]

Jumping Branch Farm H.T (Aiken, SC) [Website] [Entries] [Volunteer] [Scoring]

Morven Park Spring H.T. (Leesburg, VA) [Website] [Entries] [Volunteer] [Scoring]

The Event at TerraNova (Myakka City, FL) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Volunteer] [Scoring]

Links to Start Your Sunday:

Eventers with poor dressage scores could be blocked from cross-country, as 16 horse fall risk factors identified

Olympic event rider Jonty Evans has announced his Para-Dressage debut post-2018 fall

Modern pentathlon has biggest obstacles to clear to salvage Olympic status

Review highlights importance of social needs in the lives of stallions

Weekly Pick from SmartPak: Insect growth regulators vs. Insect defense supplements, what’s the difference? SmartPak’s Horse Health Library has all the need-to-know details 🦟

Morning Viewing: In light of the recently-revived discussion surrounding Stormy Daniels, please enjoy this awesome video of her running cross-country at Rocking Horse in 2016!

Pigs and Precision: Walk the Beefed-Up Thoresby CCI4*-S Track

Welcome, ladies and gentlemen, to the wet and wonderful Eventing Spring Carnival at Thoresby Park, where thus far several of the national classes have been cancelled, and priority given to 3* and 4* sections, in a desperate attempt to give horses and riders a serious run before their season gets underway.

With Badminton just weeks away, and Kentucky even closer, the sense of urgency is very real. These horses need to get out and prepare for the even bigger challenge that lies ahead of them, as do their riders, most of whom will be lacking match practice after less than favourable weather has led to the abandonment of several earlier fixtures.

So, fingers and toes (and eyes, or is that going too far?) crossed that we will get to see some 4* action this weekend. It’s looking promising; as I set off around Stuart Buntine’s track, the dressage was well underway, and despite the consistent rain that has been forecast, there is a quiet sense of hope that the competition will run its course, even at the expense of some of the smaller classes.

Now, about that course — all 3806 metres of it. Here’s an arial view, thanks to the CrossCountry App preview:

It’s no secret that the 4* at Thoresby is designed as a 5* prep run for most, although there was a sense that the course didn’t quite hit that brief last year, leaving some riders understandably nervous about tackling the undisputedly massive Badminton a month or so later. Time to find out if this has been rectified for 2023…grab your umbrella and let’s go!

THE TECHNICAL DETAILS:

Distance: 3806m

Optimum Time: 6.26m

Efforts: 35

Fence one: the Uvex Hat Roll.

Nothing to worry about at fence 1, the Uvex Hat Roll, which, as the name might suggest, is a very straightforward roll top, shared by all of the competitors and a nice start to everyone’s day.

Fence two: the Kinaxia Logistics Workshop.

Ditto fence two, the Kinaxia Logistics Workshop, or more specifically, a wide-ish but untroubling box, which lies on a gentle left-hand curve before a nice tootle down the hill to fence three, the Tower Equine Brush, which is — yup, you guessed it! — a fairly big, but nonetheless inviting, brush fence. Nothing at all to be worried about, much like the rest of the course thus far, but an easier start to the course is never a bad thing and gives horses old and young a chance to get into the swing of it before the course gets underway properly.

Fence three: the Tower Equine Brush.

Similarly, the simple lines of the first few fences allows riders to establish a good pace – without going too crazy –  and balance and rhythm are always key in preparation for anything that lies ahead, rather than trying to break the land speed record in an attempt to shave a few seconds off and risk losing control.

For the spicier horses, this relatively easy start to the track gives riders the chance to hopefully get them back on stride and listening before they meet anything too taxing, and likewise, with greener horses, riders can build their confidence ahead of more challenging combinations ahead.

Fence four: the Equine Bio Genie Trakehner.

The Equine Bio Genie Trakehner at number four shouldn’t interrupt that rhythm either – just remember not to look down into that ditch!

Fence five: the Sundown Bedding Brush.

As the course bears gently left towards the Sundown Bedding Brush at fence 5, which is set in the fence line and sees horses jumping straight towards the marquees and arenas, there is however, a feeling that things might be about to change. While seasoned campaigners shouldn’t have any problems jumping into the action-packed scene behind the fence, less experienced combinations may need a little more leg to prevent horses getting ‘gawky’ and losing their grip on the task in hand.

Fence six, the British Polo Gin Woodland Turn, with the A element in the foreground and the B element on the right hand side.

That task is about to get a little more serious at fence 6a and b, the British Polo Gin Woodland Turn, so it really is imperative at this point that riders have used their time wisely and got their noble steeds under control and listening, so they can land over the brush with the best possible set up before curving left handed to the A element, a post and rail on rising ground that drops away on landing, to B, a chunky skinny log on an almost direct right angle. Hence why there needs to be no back chat from horses as riders steady them and set them up for the jump and turn, as there is little room for error!

In my, inexperienced head, I decided that if (God forbid), I was to ride this, I would jump a slightly to the left, allowing for a smooth (ish) five-strided turn right to B. That’s in an ideal world of course, where your horse has read your mind and isn’t arguing the point…!

How delightful for my ego to hear none other than Piggy March also mark this out as a good route to take in her course walk for Piggy TV, which you can enjoy for free here!

However, as she says, ‘horses for courses,’ and this may not suit a boulder, scopier horse who might jump the first part quite big and lose a stride on landing, making it a tighter 4-strided turn to B; even less room for discussion between horse and rider, and even more need for upmost accuracy.

“There’s options to be had; you’ve got to make your decision as to what suits you as a rider and what suits your horse.” Wise words, as ever, from Mrs March, and applicable to life in general, not just a 4* course…!

Fence seven: the ESA Horses Owl Hole. 

Onwards then, and back up the hill to the ESA Horses Owl Hole at 7. This is fairly straightforward, but these odd-looking jumps must always be treated with respect; after all, horses do literally have to jump through a hoop, and some horses balk at the sudden change in visibility, or duck in the air while jumping to avoid making contact with the brush. Plus, such is the gap that they have to jump through, it’s skinnier than average, so both legs firmly on!

Fence eight: the Invested Cube at A and a triple brush B element on the far right.

Quickly after this comes a whole myriad of fences, amongst which lies another combination. It’s imperative then, for riders to know their line, and ideally, to let horses in on the secret too (sat nav anyone?!) but failing that, make sure they are definitely listening – it would be all too easy otherwise for any super keen beans to take control and jump the wrong fence, which although still arguably worthy of praise, would of course result in immediate elimination – not the ideal outcome!

On its own, the narrow box at the Investec Cubes here at 8AB wouldn’t be worth losing any sleep over, but this is 4*, lads, and such gifts have been left far behind. Instead, this first element is followed by a skinny triple brush, sneakily placed on a right-handed turn a mere three strides away. To my mind, the best bet here would be to angle the first element slightly, before aiming to turn in the air, and land on a good line to the B element. It’s a question, for sure, especially compared to the fences prior to this, but hopefully at this level, horses should understand what is being asked of them, and lock onto B without too many issues, though as it is a skinny, one can never forget the propensity for run outs!

Fence nine: the Oakham Veterinary Hospital Operating Table.

Hopefully there will be no need for the Oakham Veterinary Hospital Operating Table at number 9 to be used as anything more than a jump; it’s a simple table, intended to offer horses a let-up after the combinations they’ve already tackled and a nice breather before the questions that lie beyond. Still, she’s a hefty old table, and not one I’d be wanting to crash into –  so it’s all the more important to be maintain a good rhythm and balance.

Fence ten: the three-part Lycetts Turn combination.

The B element…

…and the C element.

Aaaaand before you can relax, we have some more alphabet practice, with 10ABC at the Lycetts Turn. Set right amongst the thick of the marquees and the members tent, there’s a lot for horses to take in before they even think about what’s in front of them. Remember what we said about being in control, and having your horse on side waaaay back at the beginning? Yep, you’re going to need that here; there’s no room for error, so concentrate, my loves!

10A is another table, behind which, again on a right-hand line, lies a post and rail corner, and then behind that is a matching table, which is MIM-clipped. Each individual element on its own is pretty harmless; it’s the way they have to be joined together that’s the difficult part! But in reality, the best bet would be not to overthink your line, make a decision and stick to it, riding forward with your eyes on the prize — ie., the table at C – and try to be brave. For fear of sounding like a stuck record, the need to have a horse who is listening and adjustable as you approach is increasingly pertinent: a check in pace might be advisable, allowing for a neat jump slightly left at the first element, leaving a doable four strides to the corner at B, and straight over C behind it. Or that’s my theory at least – but again, it’s much easier said than done, and I think we could see a few less-than-pretty lines and near misses here. Precision is key, and on a super fit 4* horse, gagging for a run, that isn’t always the easiest to maintain!

Fence eleven: the Ecovoltz Corners at A…

…and B.

Up the hill now to the Ecovoltz Corners at 11AB, two hunky, chunky lads, although I can’t see them causing too many problems: 4* horses are more than accustomed to this type of fence, and as long as riders focus on a positive jump over the first element, the four strides to the middle of the second corner at B should meet them pretty nicely before they gallop off down the hill, past the dreamy Thoresby Hall on the right (though I wouldn’t want to be charged with cleaning all of those windows), gradually right-handed round the  corner to the Warner Leisure Garden. This will give horses the chance to open up a little more; it’s a nice swooping line away from the hustle and bustle of the white tents and arenas, but riders will be mindful not to get too carried away as there’s a verrrry interesting line coming up.

The first element of the slalom-style question at fence twelve, the Warner Leisure Garden. 

The subsequent two elements.

Despite the bucolic name, this ain’t no leisure garden, with thee solid brush topped hanging logs set out at angles to one another, and as has been the theme so far on this course, accuracy is the name of the game, as is a decisive line and a respectful, listening pony. Luckily enough, as I came around the corner to this particular conundrum, I came upon Hector Payne (another rider who decided to save his horse for another day, following non-stop rain and less than favourable conditions), who kindly clarified things for me a little.

“It’s a very clever fence with lots of different options,” he says. “It’s designed to be jumped on a 3 and a 2 [stride pattern], but you could end up deep to B after three strides, so I would be tempted to come through the trees on a little curve to A, before adding a little curve to B so you can go on four strides, and again, a slight curve to C on three strides, so horses can see what they’re jumping with less risk of a glance-off. To go straight through on a three and a two requires a dead straight line and makes an already tricky question even trickier, but it depends what you’re sat on [which choice you’ll ultimately make.”

This view was remarkably similar to that of Wesko alumni Harry Mutch, who I caught up with earlier and who has three horses contending the 4*: “I think [my five-star horse] will probably do 3 and 2, and then the others just have to see how they’re going, because they’re less experienced. I think being chancy on the three and two is bit unnecessary, whereas I think the four and three is actually quite nice if you can just be patient — but the three and two is there. If you’re on something you know and trust, you can commit on the straight line, and the horses can actually see where they’re going.”

That’s the plan of the Burghley 2022 champ too, who intends to get stuck straight in, coming at an angle to A, before a nice three strides to B, and then another two to C, which, as she points out, is wide enough to allow for a sneaky third stride if horses “jink slightly on landing over the second element.” The main takeaway from Piggy’s analysis is much as you’d expect: the most important thing is to make a decision on your line and stick to it as best you can – don’t dither, and have confidence in your line!

Fence thirteen: the aptly named Excloosive Oxer.

After successfully manoeuvring their way through that combination, it’s a short gallop on to The Excloosive Oxer at number 13, set on the top of a reasonably steep, though short hill. It’s fairly straightforward, especially given there is an option as to which way to go here. Riders on bolder horses won’t think twice about taking the inside line straight up the hill, although that does involve quite a sharp turn over the fence at the top — though it’s a decent size, with an obvious back rail meaning horses will easily understand what they need to jump. Those wanting to give their horses a kinder approach can easily scoot behind the trees, up a gentler incline, and find themselves with more space for a straight approach up and over. Although not as direct, this shouldn’t waste too much time, and will give riders a chance to restore any confidence lost thus far over the more complicated lines. As ever, there is no right or wrong approach to this fence – it is entirely dependent on what you’re sat on.

Fence fourteen: the Agria Lifetime Equine Stables.

On again now to the Agria Lifetime Equine Stables at 14, which takes the shape of a fairly decent table set slightly downhill. Again, this shouldn’t trouble anyone, instead offering a slight breather halfway round the track. Still, it’s a 4* fence, so riders will be making sure they’re sitting up in order to get the best possible approach and give it the respect that something of this size deserves.

As the track winds away to the back fields, the hubbub of the main show field is left far behind – unless any over exuberant Shire horses have quit the day job and designed to join the athletes out on course.

Fence fifteen: the Protexin Equine Premium Stile and Chest.

Next up is the Protexin Equine Premium Stile & Chest, another combination that requires a very definite route, and a check back into a bold and bouncy. The first part is a sizeable post and rail that riders will want to approach with plenty of controllable power to allow for a clean jump over – probably slightly to the right – to be followed with a five-stride curve round to the rolltop chest at B, mindful that a matching chest lies close behind at C. As Piggy points out, it is important to get the line to B right, otherwise C becomes trickier than it needs to be. The most important thing, she suggests, is that riders approach B well enough to make sure they’ve got the right shoulder well under control to C.

I caught up with the one and only Yas Ingham at this fence too, and she tells me she’s going for five strides between A and B, too: “It seems to look like it’s going to ride on a curving five strides, so I’ll be jumping before straightening up for two strides and then making sure I can see the C flags between B, and riding a straight line out. There’s not too much to trouble them — as long as you correctly make your turn and you’re straight, they should pick up the line.”

Watching riders’ every move at this brain teaser are three not so subtle piggies, fashioned out of some pink round bales – as if horses haven’t got enough to focus on without the added distraction of giant farm animals judging them too! But still, at this stage of the course, most riders should be sat on a horse that is fully focussed on the task in hand, so hopefully these curly tailed little creatures shouldn’t knock anyone off their line.

Fence sixteen: the City Calling Recruitment Rails.

After a galloping stretch that sees the course begin to loop back to the direction of the start, horses are offered another slight let-up fence: the City Calling Recruitment Rails at 16. A repeat offender from last year’s course, this may look simple enough, but riders will be keen not to let their mounts get too strung out and long on the approach: this is a decent sized vertical, and the last thing they will want is for a tiring horse to get long into it and risk clipping the top rail. If used correctly, this straightforward jump will serve to set horses up for the remainder of the questions that lie in wait towards the end of the track, giving riders a chance to make sure they’ve still got plenty of control without throwing too much of a brain melt into the question.

Fence seventeen: the Animalintex Oxer.

Likewise at 17, the Animalintex Oxer, which lies a short gallop away. This is a sizeable brush, and horses will be jumping towards the Hawkstone Bar, which one would assume will be full of punters hoping to get a good seat at the water complex which lies just beyond it. This will give horses plenty to look at behind the fence, so riders will want to make sure they set them up will for the fairly tight right handed turn to the Hawkstone Splash at 18AB. Tempting as it may to sack off the rest of the course in favour of a cold beverage in the bar, there’s still a little way to go, and it seems a shame to call it a day when you’ve made it this far into such a challenging track!

Fence eighteen: the Hawkstone Splash.

The first play in the water involves jumping in over a skinny triple brush, before a right-handed turn back out over another skinny triple brush at B, and although the fences themselves are simple enough, this is still a decent ask, this late on in the course. Harry Mutch emphasises how important it is that horses are still very much in the zone: “Riders need to keep the horse’s attention. We’re quite late on in the course to see the water for the first time, so it might just take them by surprise, and I think you’ve just got to be aware of that.”

Fence nineteen: the Unibed Hollow.

A successful first venture through the water is followed by a quick trip back up the hill, through some reasonably sticky ground, to the Unibed Hollow at 19AB, a new combination for this year, and one that Piggy March was very complimentary about, affirming that it should ride well.

My initial thoughts were that it looks like a miniature version of The Quarry at Badminton, though a far less extreme version (unless of course, you’re a Borrower, in which case it is pretty darn scary). The angles that have dominated most of the previous combinations out on course so far are nowhere to be seen; instead, riders will be wanting to make sure they have enough power left to maintain a strong, bouncy canter in over the upright post and rails in, to land neatly enough on the other side that they make it comfortably through on a slightly curving three strides to jump out over the post and rails sitting on the top of the hill on the other side of the so-called ‘hollow,’ which is basically a big old dip with some sort of scary looking sandstone type surface. Not the most inviting thing to ask horses to jump into, but hopefully their eyes will be on the top bar of the A element, and not what lies beyond.

Fence twenty: the second pass through the Hawkstone water.

After jumping safely out of the other side, it’s a swift gallop back down the hill towards the bug puddle in front of the Hawkstone Bar, for another splish-splash through the water at 20AB. This time there’s a bit more of a test, with a big ol’ jump in over a solid looking brush topped log, and then a tight right-handed turn back out past some cleverly placed wooden barrels over another triple brush at B. There is the option to go around the back of the barrels, giving riders time to straighten their horses before presenting them to the B element, but this will waste valuable seconds, something that many riders might not have to spare at this point of the course.

The main thing for those opting to go the direct route is to make sure they get a decent jump in, leaving them room to get safely back out without an issue – with just three fences to go before home, it would be an absolute travesty to have any issue here.

But, as Harry noted, for those horses getting their first run of the season (finally!), this is a reasonable question for them: “The drop in is big enough, and we haven’t seen one at all this year, really. So just get in and then it’s a really quick turn to an acute angle out.”

 Still, experienced horses should manage it well, as long as riders are well prepared. Yas confirmed this, offering a little insight into her own plans at this fence along the way: “As I’m aiming for a spring 5*, automatically I would walk the more direct line. I think it’s definitely quite a substantial drop in so you’ll have to expect quite a big steep jump in, and obviously land, gather yourself back up again, and already look for your B element… luckily, you’ve got the barrels that do guide you on your line a little bit, so you’ve just got to be quick thinking on landing over the drop in, already thinking about B on the way out, but careful not to turn too early as well.”

Fence twenty-one: the Equilatte Coffee Table.

Phew, lots to remember! Lucky then, that riders now have a relatively straight forward run home — but the last three fences are still pretty beefy ones, especially the Equilatte Coffee Table at 21, as white as it is wide, and riders will be mindful that horses will be weary at this stage, so it is as pertinent as ever to give them the best possible approach, and not let them get too flat and long, risking a bad jump or take -off.

Fence twenty-two: the Childeric Saddles Oxer.

Ditto the penultimate fence, the Childeric Saddles Oxer. Although it may be tempting to relax a little with the finish line so close, it ain’t over til the fat lady sings, and this is still a 4* oxer that should be treated with the respect it deserves. Far better to wait until you’re over the Empire Coachbuilders Horseshoe at number 23, and safely through the finish flags that lie just beyond to finally chill out and breathe a sigh of relief. Home and dry (weather providing!) around the first 4*-S of the season….and a pretty decent one at that!

Fence twenty-three: the Empire Coachbuilders Horseshoe.

Most riders I spoke to agreed that it was a really great test for horses and riders at this level, and all were hopeful that the rain would hold off long enough to let them tackle it.

Last year’s Grantham Cup winner, Piggy reiterated this when I spoke to her briefly on Friday evening, after a day of almost constant rain: “It’s a step up from last year, a really good 4* course for horses having a run before Badminton and that sort of thing — it’s just the weather hasn’t been very kind, and that has made it very difficult for everyone. It’s put everyone in awkward positions of what situation is best for them, their horses, their owners. It’s such a shame for the place because it looks incredible… I hope it stops raining, it can dry up nicely, and we can have a good weekend of sport. The course is good, and there are a lot of very nice horses here, so it would be nice that they can all get a run.”

The weather gods must have been listening, thank goodness, as today (Saturday), saw a good old ‘drying day,’ and other riders were complimentary about the ground and the course, quietly optimistic they would get out and have a play.

Emma Thomas in particular was keen to get out and get stuck in, as she was hoping to use this weekend to get the necessary two MERs she needs ahead of a planned five-star run.

“The ground is incredible really, considering the weather and I think the track has great questions, especially in the mid-section of the course,” she says.

The World Champ also offered a similarly positive opinionnoting in particular the suitability of the track as pre-5* tune up: “There’s plenty of questions on course – it’s really good preparation for our spring five-star, the ground is drying out and I’m staying hopeful at this point, but I’m just going to see what it’s like in the morning before I start.”

 That seems to be the opinion of several of the riders that remain – sadly, the deluge of Friday saw several of the line-up deciding to save their horses for another day, rather than risk them in the mud – so let’s keep those digits crossed for no more rain overnight making sure we finally get to go eventing, and over a pretty epic 4* track at that!

Tomorrow’s schedule has been slightly rejigged to accommodate the mass withdrawals, and so we’ll now see the national Advanced class start the day’s proceedings with showjumping from 9.00 am local time (4.00 a.m. ET) and cross-country kicking off at 11.00 a.m. (6.00 a.m. ET). The CCI4*-S classes will run back to back, with the Grantham Cup feature class showjumping from 10.30 a.m. (5.30 a.m. ET) and going cross-country from 12.30 p.m. (7.30 a.m. ET), while the second section will showjumping from 11.50 a.m. (6.50 a.m. ET) and go cross-country from 2.00 p.m. (9.00 a.m. ET). Horse&Country TV will be live-streaming the whole day’s cross-country action, so tune in to watch it as it happens, and keep it locked on EN for a full report on the finale of Britain’s first four-star of the 2023 season.

The Eventing Spring Carnival at Thoresby Park: [Website] [Times] [Live Scoring] [Live Stream] [EN’s Coverage]

Liz Halliday-Sharp Gallops to the Win in The Event at TerraNova CCI4*-S

The question everyone had heading into the cross country phase of the CCI4*-S class at TerraNova was, “Will he or won’t he?” (or if you’d rather – Will Will or won’t Will?).

Will Coleman and Hyperion Stud LLC’s Chin Tonic HS (Chin Champ x Wildera, by Quinar Z) led the field on a 19.6 after dressage and show jumping, giving the pair a seven point margin over second place Liz Halliday-Sharp aboard Ocala Horse Properties’ and The Monster Partnership’s Cooley Be Cool (Fortuna x HHS Carlotta, by Cavalier Royale).

But there was much speculation over whether or not Will would actually leave the start box aboard “Chin”, an 11-year-old Holsteiner bred in Germany by Inken Von Graefin Platen-Hallermund, who won the CCI4*-S at Carolina two weeks ago and is aimed at the Land Rover Kentucky CCI5* later this month.

Liz Halliday-Sharp and Cooley Be Cool. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

We finally had our answer this morning when Will withdrew, choosing to use his weekend as a big-atmosphere combined test instead. That left the door wide open for the next five top-placed competitors, who were separated on the leaderboard by only two penalties. Several other pairs also withdrew before the cross country phase, including Buck Davidson’s Sorocaima (Rock Hard Ten xx x Sankobasi xx, by Pulpit xx) and Erroll Gobey (Cassini II x Ulla II, by Contender), both of whom are also aimed at Kentucky.

Will’s withdrawal of Chin Tonic left Liz occupying two of the top three spots, moving her to the top of the leaderboard with Cooley be Cool and putting her into a tie for second place with  Shanroe Cooley (Dallas x Shanroe Sapphire, by Condios), who sat on a 28.1 alongside Caroline Martin‘s mount HSH Blake (Tolan R x Doughiska Lass, by Kannan). It also shifted everyone’s favorite amateur event rider Dan Krietl into third position on a score of 28.3 aboard Kay Dixon’s Carmango (Chirivell x Taramanga, by Templer xx).

There was plenty to do out there today on Capt. Mark Phillips’ CCI4*-S track, one that featured quite a few twists and turns that all but guaranteed that the optimum time would be difficult to make.

Dan Kreitl and Carmango. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

Originally the 4*-S was slotted to begin around mid-day, but due to a projected high temperature around 90 degrees the decision was made to shift the class forward to the morning, allowing for cooler temperatures, with the first horse leaving the start box at 8:45 a.m.

While 38 of the 46 riders that started cross country came home with zero jump penalties — an 82.6% clear rate for what several riders described as a “fair and friendly” track (check out the course preview here) — the course did cause problems for a few pairs, including two that are on the entry list for Kentucky.

Lexi Scovil and Chico’s Man VDF Z (Chico’s Boy x Chardonnay Z, by Caretano Z) had their first bit of trouble with a runout at 12b, the very skinny open corner out of the first water complex. A few fences later the pair parted ways at 15a, the angled brush. Hawley Bennet-Awad and long-time partner Jollybo (Jumbo x Polly Coldunnell xx by Danzig Connection xx) had an uncharacteristic miscommunication at the B element of the table-to-brush corner combination at 9AB, which resulted in fall for Hawley. Jamie Kellock also had a fall at fence 5, the collapsible picnic table. All horses and riders are reported to be fine and back at the barns.

As suspected, the open oxer at 12B proved to be the bogey fence of the course, causing two other runouts and an activated MIM-clip. Almost all the jump penalties recorded today were at one of the course’s four corners, with problems also seen at 20b, a left-handed brush corner, and 6b, a right-handed brush corner.

Time penalties proved to be by far the most influential element of this phase, though, with no horse and rider pairs logging a double clear round. The two fastest rounds of the day belonged to Liz aboard Cooley Be Cool and Dan aboard Carmango, both stopping the clock with only four time penalties.

Liz Halliday-Sharp and Cooley Nutcracker. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

Liz’s clear, fast round secured her spot atop the leaderboard, finishing on a score of 30.6 penalties with Cooley Be Cool. She had three horses in the class, all finishing in the top 10: Cooley Nutcracker came home in 6th place position, and Shanroe Cooley finished in ninth, both adding only time penalties to their dressage scores. Cooley Be Cool, a 10-year-old Irish Sporthorse Gelding bred in Ireland by Marion Hughes, is on a bit of a hot streak this spring, having also just won the CCI3*-S at Carolina two weeks ago.

“I had sort of my slightly younger, less experienced four-star horses here, and I thought it was great for that,” Liz said. “I sort of planned to not run my other two that quickly and just give them a really good confident first four-star of the year, and everything went to plan.”

When asked what’s next for Cooley Be Cool, known in the barn as “Dave”, Liz chuckled and said “The plan is for Dave to do the Ocala four-star and then he’ll have one more little prep run, and hopefully he’ll be going to the five-star at Luhmühlen.”

Dan Krietl, no doubt a crowd favorite here at TerraNova despite being over 1,000 miles away from his home base of Muncie, IN, crept his way up the leaderboard after each phase of this weekend’s competition. He and Carmango were ninth after dressage on a 28.3, a clear show jumping moved them up to fifth, and today’s fast trip across the country had the pair finishing on a 32.3 for second place.

“He was great,” Dan said, “He started out well in the dressage, it was one of our better tests for sure.”

The most exciting part of his weekend though, if you ask Dan, was his clear show jumping round. Just last month Dan and Carmango saw their weekend ended early at the Eventing Grand Prix at Bruce’s Field, where five rails resulted in the pair’s first compulsory retirement.

“Show jumping has been my weakness for far too long, so it was probably the highlight of the year for me getting a double clear show jumping round, especially because I kind of did a faceplant at the Aiken showcase and had a bunch of rails down.”

He was quick to thank Bobby Costello for his help with that phase, saying Bobby “took the time to call me after my show jumping results were going the wrong direction and gave me some great advice.”

Caroline Martin and King’s Especiale. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

Dan and Carmango, who was bred in Germany by Heinrich Bergendahl, seemed to be out for a merry jaunt across the country this morning. “For the cross country he was right there with me and had a nice open gallop over the course. It was a lot of fun and I enjoyed it.” Dan is next headed to Kentucky, where he’ll look to finish strong in the Lexington CCI4*-S.

Caroline Martin brought two CCI4* first timers to TerraNova in HSH Blake and King’s Especiale (Connect x Cha Cha Cha Special, by Vittorio), both only 8-years-old. HSH Blake in particular made his debut an impressive one by securing a third place finish, adding only eight cross country time penalties to his dressage score.

“Over the moon!” Caroline said about her weekend with both of her young superstars. “My two four-star horses, HSH Blake and King’s Especiale, they’re unbelievable. Blake obviously shined this weekend and placed third, but I’m really excited to have two eight-year-olds, I think the world of them.”

Caroline was also pleased with the course for her two young horses in particular. “I thought it was quite nice for young horses. I wouldn’t say it was the most challenging four-star out there but I thought it was fair.”

Leslie Law and Voltaire de Tre. Photo by Shannon Brinkman Photography.

Of the 11 Kentucky-bound pairs that contested TerraNova this weekend, the top placed finisher was Voltaire de Tre (Gentleman IV x Jasmina du Fresne, by Socrate de Chivre), expertly piloted by Leslie Law to add just 8.4 time penalties to his dressage score, finishing in 8th place. The big flashy Selle Francais gelding, bred in France by Roland Bazire, will be seeking to make his fifth CCI5* start later this month.

That wraps up our CCI4*S coverage from TerraNova! Go Eventing!

This article will be updated with more photos — stay tuned!

The Event at TerraNova: [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Live Scores] [Schedule] [EN’s Coverage]

Emily King is Best of the Bunch on Final Dressage Day at a Complicated Thoresby

Hey! Recognise these guys? That’s Tom McEwen and Toledo de Kerser! You probably really like them! You also won’t read about them in this report because they withdrew so quickly after dressage that I couldn’t even tell you what place they were in at the time, let alone where they’d have been now. Anyway they scored a 27.6 if that’s information that you’re into. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

I’ve been at this game for a fair while now, but even so, eventing still finds ways to treat me — and, well, all of us — to entirely new experiences. The absolute onslaught of appalling weather that the Eventing Spring Carnival at Thoresby Park has been besieged by isn’t exactly a novel experience; we’re in England at the cusp of spring, after all, and if us Brits do one thing well, it’s rain (and whinging, also, probably). Nor is mud a new thing; nor is the debate about whether or not to run or save horses for another day. We’re used to seeing plenty of withdrawals, too; I’ve reported on events where we’ve lost half a class before cross-country because the ground is too wet, or too dry, or too something else entirely — but even I’ve never spent a morning trying to report on dressage when there’s effectively an entire judging break between every single test. That’s no exaggeration: yesterday, as the rain hammered away at us, the warm-up ring was chock-full of horses at all times and both the three- and four-star arenas were abuzz with activity all through the day, without so much as a lunch break to be had from 8.00 a.m. ’til 5.00 p.m. But today? When I arrived at just past 8, there was one lone horse pootling around the arena, and no one to be seen in the warm-up. And that’s how it continued on for hours: there’d be a long span of nothingness, then one horse would appear, warm up on its own, do its test on its own, and leave us all in silence with nothing at all to look at once again. It was a little bit like eventing after the apocalypse, which isn’t actually a totally far-fetched idea, because I’m beginning to think that those of us mad enough to love this sport really would keep doing it even if life as we know it stopped existing entirely.

Imogen Murray and Shannondale Vintage take a spin around the Open Intermediate at the tail end of a day of cross-country. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

But then you’d step outside of the walled garden in which those two dressage rings are ensconced, and things felt a little different. Both the remaining OI sections, plus the CCI3*-S, tackled showjumping (mercifully moved out of the main arena, which has now been relegated to a country fair activity area) and cross-country, and though they suffered an eye-watering number of withdrawals, too, there actually was some action going on. Not loads, mind you: at one point in the first OI section, just one horse trundled by over the course of nearly an hour, but it was happening. There may have been just ten horses left to run in one OI and thirteen in the other, but that still counts, right? And those who did run actually largely did so sans drama, albeit slowly. Despite yesterday’s drama with those deep arenas and that seriously tough footing in the showjumping, the cross-country — or at least two-thirds of it — held up remarkably well, helped along by a crisp, dreary, but almost entirely dry day. (And, actually, we did have 65 horses go cross-country in the CCI3*-S, lest I misrepresent this as a day when just a small handful of horses tested that theory.)

Not that anyone ever regrets withdrawing a horse, for what it’s worth, but for those who truly need this run — the ones who have a five-star looming; the ones who have seen every single previous intended run cancelled — it was heartening. Will anyone run quickly tomorrow? It’s hugely unlikely. Will our original start list of 148 CCI4*-S competitors be cut in half? Almost certainly — as of right now, it’s down to 78, and we’re sure to see plenty more riders who are staying simply to log a showjumping round and call it a day. But right now, the show looks like it’s actually going to go on, and frankly, kudos must go to everyone involved; the team at BEDE Events, who have been doing no less than the best they can after being a truly crap hand, of course, but also the riders, and the owners, and the grooms who have put in hours of deliberation to make the best decisions they can for their horses, whether that’s to run or to withdraw. That Thoresby has been a bit of a stressful situation so far isn’t anyone’s fault but the weather’s (and I guess, by that token, we could argue we’re all to blame for being a bit crap at recycling, for booking long haul flights, and for not burning massive corporations to the ground, but that’s another rant for another day. Hey, did you know this has been the wettest March recorded in the UK in 40 years? We all certainly do!)

In any case, while the CCI4*-S worked its way through a long final day of dressage that could have been a quick matinee performance of dressage, really, and while the three-star and Intermediates cracked on with all their bits and bobs outside, there have been plenty of changes in the works to ensure that whatever we wake up to tomorrow, we’ve got the best of it. Now that the main arena has been well and truly canned off, showjumping will relocate up near the lorry park to an untouched field that should have housed the cancelled Novice dressage tests, and continued work is being done on restoring the ground on cross-country where it’s needed, with take-offs and landings being reinforced with stone. I suspect we’ll all be glad for a duvet day of some description on Monday, but for now, we have something to crack on with. That’s something, at least — even if we do have to forfeit seeing some of the super horses we’d hoped to see as a result of all those understandable withdrawals.

Among them? A number of the horses formerly in the top ten, including yesterday’s third-placed Tom McEwen and JL Dublin, and overnight leaders Laura Collett and London 52. That means that overnight runners-up Yasmin Ingham and Banzai du Loir now lead on their score of 25.4 as they face the tricky decision of whether or not to run in what is the horse’s last — and, actually, first — prep run ahead of Kentucky.

Emily King and Valmy Biats. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Emily King slots into overnight second place with Valmy Biats, who she co-owns with breeder Philippe BrivoisJacquie and Jeremy Shere, and the Event Horse Owners Syndicate group, which provides membership-based microsyndicate subscriptions to fans of the sport. They were out in force to support ‘their’ horse and rider, who were among the small handful of competitors to come forward for today’s second half of the first phase in this class — and their round of enthusiastic applause upon completion of the test was the first we’ve heard here at Thoresby. (Fortunately, they’re all very nice people, so they stuck around to cheer on the sparse few subsequent competitors, too – which certainly brightened up the eerily quiet walled garden.)

There was enough to cheer about, too: Badminton-bound Emily and Valmy earned themselves a 26.8 with a polished, professional test and no visible issues with the ground — though, as Emily explains, “he lives in the field literally the whole time, so he’s used to it!”

Even for horses who are confident on tricky ground, though, there’s the fine art of getting the warm-up right that needs to be negotiated first, and Emily’s one frustration following her ride was a niggling feeling that she’d slightly overcooked it.

“It was a fine balance, because you want them to get used to it, but it’s also tiring for them — it’s like working in sinking sand,” she explains. “But I was really pleased with him; he’s getting so much more chilled and rideable. I didn’t go for it [in the extensions] because I didn’t want to risk him losing his balance and make a mistake, so I was purposefully a bit more guarded in there than usual. Actually, he can be a bit of a hothead in his first tests of the year, so just for him to go in and be so calm was the main thing.”

Sarah Bullimore and Corouet. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

Sarah Bullimore‘s tiny — and rather fresh — European bronze medallist Corouet takes fourth place, just behind Emilie Chandler and Gortfadda Diamond, who remain in podium position two days after their test. Though ‘Elfie’, who Sarah bred herself from former team ride Lilly Corinne, had plenty of pep in his step before and after his test, he executed a professional, mature performance in the ring to make the best of the holding conditions and earn himself a 27.3.

Like all of the elite first-phase performers we’ve seen this week, his result doesn’t rival his very best at the level (a 19.6, for what it’s worth, earned at Burgham in 2021) — but conditions like these require slightly more conservative riding, with an aim to produce a correct, positive test, rather than one that risks a wobble or a loss of confidence in a patch of questionable ground. With that in mind, Sarah was pleased with the work her stable star produced.

“He stayed with me, though I did slightly over prepare for the second flying change, and he had a bit of a skip,” she says. “That’s normally a highlight, but actually, for him to stay with me and not try to be naughty was lovely.”

Sarah and Elfie are among those lucky few pairs to have already managed a couple of runs this season, though even this, Sarah explains, requires a bit of finely-honed balancing: “The more runs you get in, the faster he gets — but on the flip side, the more runs he has, the feistier he is,” she laughs. “But then, in order to know I have control, I have to run — so it’s all a work in progress, but he was lovely at Poplar and while he was a little feistier at Lincoln, he finished second because a lot of people got stuck in the mud.”

That’s not an issue for 15.2hh, finely-built Elfie: “You’d think being so little, he’d get stuck in the mud – but actually, it helps me ride him, so it’s probably a good thing,” she says with a smile.

Ros Canter rounds out the top five with her 2022 Badminton runner-up Lordships Graffalo, who posted a 27.4, and she also sits sixth overnight on Pencos Crown Jewel, who earned a 28.3 for her sweet test yesterday.

William Fox-Pitt and Grafennacht. Photo by Tilly Berendt.

The only other new entrant to the top ten from today’s competition is William Fox-Pitt with the classy Graffenacht, who returns to FEI competition after sitting out the 2022 season.

“She’s feeling great after her unexplained sabbatical last year, which we hope time will have sorted,” says William, who currently sits seventh on 29.9 with the eleven-year-old 2021 Boekelo runner-up. This week will ostensibly be a prep run for either Kentucky or Badminton — if he decides to run. That decision will also impact which of those two entries he’ll keep, and which he’ll discard. But even getting this far, he explains, has been something of a bureaucratic process after her time off.

“She has to have a four-star run because she needs the qualification [to go five-star] — but actually, she wasn’t initially allowed to come here, to be honest,” he explains. “Under the new rules, she’d have had to have done a three-star to do a four-star to do a five-star, and there wasn’t time, so British Eventing had to write a letter to the FEI applying for an exemption to be able to run here, which they granted.”

Should he decide not to run the mare, though, there’s another option: “She could go to the four-star at Burnham Market in two weeks, but they fly to Kentucky so soon after that it would be unfair to do that — so if she has to go to Burnham Market, she’ll go on to Badminton. I don’t really have a preference, but having had a year off, Kentucky might be a fairer question. It’s just a more friendly occasion; it was bloody serious the last time I went there, but it’s also a bit more on a plate for them, whereas at Badminton, you get Eric Winter fences — you have to kind of shut your eyes and hope a bit!”

Whichever way he decides to structure the rest of the mare’s weekend, though, he’s been infused with a burst of optimism after expecting a horror show at the dressage, and finding — well, perhaps something more like ‘good hunting ground’, as Nicola Wilson later referred to it with a grin.

“To be honest, [the dressage ring] is amazing compared to what I was expecting,” William says. “I was expecting this” — he gestures towards yesterday’s warm-up ring, which resembles nothing so much as a freshly ploughed field — “but actually, although it’s muddy and mucky, it hasn’t gone pothole-y. They can work in it, and she couldn’t care less; she’s a tough old wench!”

The top ten going into the two-phase final day of Thoresby in the Grantham Cup CCI4*-S.

Piggy March retains her lead from yesterday in the CCI4*-S P section with the relatively inexperienced Brookfield Cavalier Cruise, who sits nearly two points ahead of second-placed Harry Meade and Red Kite on a score of 25.4 to Harry’s 27.3. Yesterday’s second- and third-placed competitors, Flora Harris and Monbeg Alcatraz and Edie Campbell and Fireball F, now sit third and fourth respectively. This division, which is for lower-ranked horses, is chock-full of up-and-coming, inexperienced horses and some new faces among the riders, too, so stay tuned for a full report and catch-up with the section leaders tomorrow, when we’ll be focusing our attention on their cross-country performances.

The top ten after dressage in the second CCI4*-S section.

Tomorrow’s schedule has been slightly rejigged to accommodate the mass withdrawals, and so we’ll now see the national Advanced class start the day’s proceedings with showjumping from 9.00 am local time (4.00 a.m. ET) and cross-country kicking off at 11.00 a.m. (6.00 a.m. ET). The CCI4*-S classes will run back to back, with the Grantham Cup feature class showjumping from 10.30 a.m. (5.30 a.m. ET) and going cross-country from 12.30 p.m. (7.30 a.m. ET), while the second section will showjumping from 11.50 a.m. (6.50 a.m. ET) and go cross-country from 2.00 p.m. (9.00 a.m. ET). Horse&Country TV will be live-streaming the whole day’s cross-country action, so tune in to watch it as it happens, and keep it locked on EN for a full report on the finale of Britain’s first four-star of the 2023 season. Until then: Go Eventing! I think we actually might!

The Eventing Spring Carnival at Thoresby Park: [Website] [Times] [Live Scoring] [Live Stream] [EN’s Coverage]

Galway Downs Day 2: Tamie Smith Stays Ahead

Tamie Smith and Danito. Photo by Tina Fitch Photography.

Sunshine was Friday’s first star after Thursday’s long afternoon of heavy rain. And Tamie Smith ended the day in her same starring role with the 1, 2 and 3 spots in the CCI4*-S after show jumping.

She’s first with Ruth Bley’s Danito, 2nd with Alexandra Ahearn’s Mai Baum and third with Julianne Guariglia’s Solaguayre California. They all stay on their dressage scores of 21.8, 22.2, and 31.7 respectively.

“He was a little casual,” Tamie said of the hard knocks Danito gave the first two fences in Marc Donovan’s show jumping course. “I was like, ‘What are you doing? But, actually that’s kind of normal. Danito thrives in the bigger atmospheres and the bigger tracks.” Drawing on her work with Australian show jumper Scott Keach, Tamie added an extra stride before fence three to “get him back on his hind legs. He really jumped up and around it, and he was like, ‘Oh, okay!” Then, he was in his element and he was great.”

Tamie credits Scott for giving her the tools needed to improve each of her horses’ jumping skills, in their training and in the heat of the moment like today. Danito, Mai Baum and Solaguayre California were double clear and Elliot V, owned by the Elliot V Partnership, had only a .8 time fault.

Mai Baum was “even more spectacular than normal” and California “jumped amazing once she got over being beside herself on the way to the first jump.” Compared to her more seasoned stablemates, the 12-year-old Argentine Sport Horse struggles when show jumping comes before cross-country because of sheer excess energy.

Asked which horse’s performance she was most pleased with, Tamie named Elliot, who’s in 6th place with a 34.6. “He jumped like a million bucks. As I was jumping around, I was thinking that I could really go out show jumping with this one.”

After The Rain Has Fallen

Tamie Smith and Mai Baum. Photo by Tina Fitch Photography.

Uncertain schedules greeted the riders in the morning as the organizing team evaluated the arena surfaces following Thursday’s freak downpours.

The CCI2* dressage scheduled to start Friday’s action in the Grand Prix Arena was postponed in favor of letting the sun dry out the footing. As the day progressed, it was decided that only the CCI4* jumping would be staged. And that was moved to an adjacent arena, normally used as the warm-up for the showcase ring.

Even though both large rings have the same footing material and endured the same amount of rain, “every arena is different,” explained FEI Technical Delegate Andrew Temkin. “We recognized the Grand Prix arena was holding more water than was optimal. The best way to mitigate that was to postpone the 2* dressage, giving it more time to dry.”

Making the decision was an “evolving process,” Andrew added. “We evaluated every few hours, then made the decision at noon.”

While riders respected and appreciated the organizer’s caution, the uncertainty did “make for kind of a chaotic day,” said Marc Grandia, whose double clear with Campari FFF moves him up to 5th, on a 34.3. Owned by Team Rebecca LLC, the 13-year-old Holsteiner made easy work of a course Marc summed up as “fun” with an effective 79-second time allowed.

“I’m riding three other horses, so the changes meant I was shifting around other things, but mainly we just have to go with the flow,” Marc said. “I have a lot of praise for (organizer) Robert (Kellerhouse) for making the right adjustments so that we had the best ground to jump on. The footing is really drying out well and it was great today.”

New Looks Even For Those Based at Galway

Sitting 4th in the 4*, Emilee Libby is thrilled with Tosca, Natalie Valente’s 14-year-old Dutch Warmblood mare. It’s the beautiful gray mare’s first Advanced level outing, and she was double clear on a 32.9. “She’s the kind of horse that needs a challenge and I think we’re here,” Emilee observed. Today’s biggest challenge for the mare was colorful, fresh-looking new fences. “There were some very big, bright, beautiful jump designs in there that she hadn’t seen before. She was a little more backed off than usual — not as in she wasn’t going to jump, but she was big-eyed and jumped with her knees up to her chest.”

Katy Robinson and her own 11-year-old Thoroughbred, Outrageous Dance, incurred 1.8 time penalties, but the crowd cared only for the spectacular riding Katy did after a stirrup fell off her saddle somewhere around fence 4, a triple bar spread. “I didn’t realize it was actually gone until I saw it lying in the ground on my way to jump 6,” Katy said. With the crowd loudly in her corner, “I think I may have ridden better because I was so focused on staying in the middle of my horse and supporting him!”

Tamie, Emilee and Katy concurred that Saturday’s cross-country will be up to 4* snuff in every way.

2* and 3* Have Double-Duty Saturday

Getting the footing right involved pushing the 2* and 3* jumping to Saturday morning. It starts at 8 a.m. with the 3* contenders, with riders heading out on cross-country starting at 8:30 a.m. It’s not ideal, especially for those riding multiple horses, but it’s another thing the riders accepted as necessary.

Jordan Linstedt is one of those riders with multiple horses. “I’m a little stressed out about the 3* jumping and cross-country both tomorrow. With eight horses going through the day, that makes it challenging!”

After Thursday’s dressage, Jordan and FE Friday are third in the 3*, behind Tamie Smith and Kynan and Karen O’Neal and Clooney 14.

Counterbalancing tomorrow’s worries for Jordan is her joy over her CCI2* dressage test with the Lovas Partnership’s Lovely Lola. The Washington-based rider and the 9-year-old Hanoverian earned a 26.9 to lead the division.

“She was a bit nervous and tense, I think because of the lighting and the late time, but she used it to her benefit in the form of expressiveness,” Jordan explained. “She’s an extraordinary horse that I’m extremely fortunate to ride.”

Friday’s test was the latest fulfillment of predictions for big potential. Lola came into Jordan’s life at the insistence of the late Jean Moyer. “Jean found her in Europe and said, ‘You just have to buy her.'” Jordan’s 5* partner RevitaVet Capato had recently been euthanized after a pasture accident. It was not an ideal time to buy a new prospect, but the Moyers, Bridget and Kevin Brewer and Klaus and Teresa Giloi came together as the Lovas Partnership to make it possible.

Jim Moyer was on the scene Friday to witness this latest stage of the special partnership his wife had envisioned. Jim is a dedicated and much-loved volunteer on the West Coast eventing scene. Galway’s organizers hope he took a break from ring-stewarding to see Jordan and Lovely Lola’s lovely ride.

Lauren Billys and her own Can Be Sweet, an 11-year-old German Sport Horse are second in the 2* on a 28.1, and Gabriella Ringer and Get Wild are 3rd on a 29.8.

Out-of-area fans can catch all the international action on Ride On Video’s livestream, featuring excellent commentary.

Galway Downs International H.T (Temecula, CA) [Website] [Entries] [Ride Times] [Volunteer][Scoring] [Live Stream]

Between the Ears with Alexa Lapp

It seems like these days we look at each other’s lives through the lens of a highlight reel. We get to see the incredible trips, the best jumps, and the moments that we’re proud enough of to put on social media. What we don’t talk about is how much pressure this adds to athletes on both ends of the news feed.

Riders, whether professional or not, are made to feel like they ‘have to’ post something that makes them look cool and successful. Then, as we consume this content, we are stuck with the disillusioned perception that the sport is easy and that if you’re not succeeding, then maybe you aren’t cut out for it. I would like to take this opportunity to go ‘between the ears’ of some of the riders that make up our Eventing Nation and work to understand some of the real challenges this industry presents.

To read more from the Between the Ears series, click here.

Alexa Lapp and Cambalda. Photo by Amy Flemming-Waters / AFW Photography.

Nearly every time I open my Facebook feed, there is a “help wanted” ad looking for working students, grooms, and riders. People who stay in a program for more than six months to a year are becoming an exception, not a rule.

From the outside looking in, a combination of burnout, confidence issues, financial issues, and unrealistic expectations are plaguing the industry. For this edition of Between the Ears, I decided to catch up with Alexa Lapp, who has spent over eight years working for Jennie Saville (nee Brannigan). Alexa is currently handing over the reins of her self-produced CCI3* horse, Pasco, to Jennie and going to take some time to explore the world outside of horses; however, her hard work over the last decade is something that can’t be ignored.

What are the main reasons you stayed in one program instead of “barn hopping” like many in the industry do?

I’ve been working for Jennie full-time for eight years but I helped her on and off for the two years before that. I think the main reason I stayed is that it was a good fit, I liked Jennie’s teaching style and her horsemanship. I also do think being loyal to someone will more likely give you opportunities. You can’t expect someone to take a chance on you if they think you may up and leave in a few months. That being said, you shouldn’t stay somewhere if it’s not the right fit; I got lucky that my first trainer knew Jennie and that we got along so well right from the beginning.

Alexa is right about putting the effort in to get the opportunities out. I think so many people think they deserve to ride and compete right away, but development as an equestrian athlete is a long haul. Alexa got to run her first Advanced on Jennie’s CCI5* mount Cambalda (Ping), but that opportunity was not just given to her — it was earned through hard work, time, and dedication.

Can you tell me about a time that you lost your confidence in riding or competing?

When I went to Young Riders in 2016, I was the trailblazer for my area because I had never had a stop on my horse ever and I ended up being eliminated. Jennie gave me some really good advice to help me overcome this. She said ‘it may feel like your world is ending at the moment but in a few months, it’s not going to matter’. We went home and schooled the same thing she stopped at, went to my next show and she jumped a similar thing. It’s good to remind yourself that they are animals, and you can always school them better or train them better when you make a mistake or one of you loses confidence. There’s also no shame in stepping back down and building yourself back up.

Jennie’s advice is aligned with something commonly referred to as the 5 by 5 rule: “If something won’t matter in five years, don’t waste more than five minutes worrying about it now.” In my experience, both as an athlete and a mental performance coach, I tend to give a little bit more than five minutes to process negative emotions, but the acceptance part of this advice is so important.

So many people think goal pursuit is linear and that if you put in the work, the performance will follow. While this is true in some regards, our sport is so variable, and pursuing a goal will all your heart may lead to success, but there will also likely be rejection, illness, injury, unfairness, and failure along the way too. As long as you can stay focused on the things you value in your pursuit, you’ll be better equipped to handle the setbacks when they come.

Alexa Lapp and Cambalda. Photo by Jenni Autry.

Can you tell me about a time you felt most burnt out and what factors you believe contributed to those feelings?

I think I was most burnt out when we stepped Ping down from the Advanced level and I was competing with just a few young horses at the Novice level, including Pasco. Young horses have a way of making you feel incompetent. In theory, I had this amazing opportunity to ride for the Gardners and had two of my own going as well, but I got stuck in a mindset where I felt like I wasn’t doing a good enough job producing them and it was pretty tough.

I had also just spent every penny I had on Pasco so I was working any job I could to afford his bills. When you’re working long, hard hours and still barely getting by it’s hard to picture life being any different. During this time, I had to remind myself that things aren’t always going to be perfect. I went to Jennie to talk about how I was feeling and she helped adjust my schedule and gave me more lessons on the horses I felt I was struggling with. She helped me remember why I was getting the opportunities that I was, and help me focus more on the good than the bad. It’s also good to have friends that are in a similar situation. Almost anyone that has a young horse is going to feel stuck or frustrated, so I connected with my friends that could relate.

Sometimes when things are falling apart they might actually be falling into place. Steve Jobs said, “You can’t connect the dots looking forward; you can only connect them looking backwards. So you have to trust that the dots will somehow connect in your future. You have to trust in something – your gut, destiny, life, karma, whatever. This approach has never let me down, and it has made all the difference in my life.” Alexa is right in that it’s hard to see a future or stay motivated when all you have are young unpredictable horses that you put a lot of work into one day and that still try to buck you off the next. Being able to embrace the growing pains and trust the future really can help with burnout.

What was one of the biggest obstacles you had to overcome on your way to one of your proudest achievements (and what were they)?

My proudest achievement was producing Pasco to the CCI3*-L level. Honestly, being able to financially support him to this level was the biggest obstacle. Besides entry fees, there are cross country schooling fees, vet bills, farrier bills, and more. I had to ask for help to make it possible, which I was lucky to get, but it’s always a little bit uncomfortable to ask people for financial help.

Can you tell me a little bit about the emotions you experienced the weekend you moved up to Advanced for the first time?

I remember not believing it was going to happen — like something silly was going to ruin it.

My dressage went really well and then Jennie had a bad fall and I wasn’t sure that I should even run. I was so emotional finishing cross country because I was happy to have completed it but sad that Jennie wasn’t there for it. I went on to finish third, which was an incredible feeling. I was so grateful and everyone was so supportive and had so many kind words. I don’t think I’ll ever forget any details of that weekend.

This was actually my first weekend working for Jennie, and I remember Alexa grappling with the idea of scratching from the show. In the midst of a lot of chaos, she was able to produce an excellent result. Sometimes distractions actually make us narrow our focus and shift into a “get it done” mindset, but it’s all about how you chose to react. If you have a reason to fail, and you give in to it, you will most likely sabotage your own chances, but if you can reappraise the situation and remain focused in spite of distractions, you may actually set yourself up for peak performance.

Alexa Lapp and Cambalda. Photo by Leslie Wylie.

What advice do you have for someone in the sport who is currently facing adversity??

Stick through the tough part — it always gets better. Don’t be afraid to ask for help or talk to someone; everyone has gone through bad times in this sport. I also really think it’s important to have something that you love outside of the horses so that when things aren’t going great it doesn’t feel like your whole world is crashing down

How did you feel when you found out Jennie was going to be able to keep Pasco and what’s next for you?

I mainly felt relief. I’ve been so concerned about making sure he was going to go to a good person I was happy he’d be staying with a person and program I know and respect so much. Obviously selling him was bittersweet but this was a best case scenario! I’m going to get a “normal” job and then I am planning a trip to Europe to spend a few months there this fall. I still hope to help Jennie at the big events and come to visit the horses! I’ve known most of the horses since they were four-year-olds or younger than that so I’ll be keeping up with them and Jennie. In a year or so I’ll reevaluate and probably get another young one to produce if I haven’t already bought one by then.

I know I can’t wait to see how far Jennie and Pasco will go, and couldn’t be happier for all parties involved. Good luck to Alexa on her next adventure, although as she said, I’m sure we’ll still be seeing her around.